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jayzehr
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bullet Topic: Public Domain Question
    Posted: 3/06/10 at 2:04am
If Charley's Aunt was first produced in the 1890s, why isn't it the public domain by now?

Anybody know anything about that?
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jayzehr
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bullet Posted: 3/06/10 at 8:45pm
So, I found one reference to "the public domain original" but nothing else. Samuel French wants royalties. According to the preface, the copyright has been renewed several times with at least one revision but what is now being licensed is the original 19th century version. Everything else I can find states that anything written before 1923 is in the public domain no matter what.

Not a burning issue for me, just curious.
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POB14
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bullet Posted: 3/18/10 at 3:49pm

Dunno.  Thought I had an answer here earlier, but now I think I was wrong.



Edited by POB14 - 3/18/10 at 3:54pm
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SeanReidLaw
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bullet Posted: 6/24/10 at 11:16am
Are you sure that it is the ORIGIONAL script and not one of the many adaptations that have been created? Adaptations would have their own copyright.
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edh915
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bullet Posted: 6/24/10 at 11:15pm
I just happen to have a copy of "Charley's Aunt" recently purchased from Samuel French. 

The title page says "This Acting Edition is printed from the MSS by Brandon Thomas as first performed in 1892."

The second page says, "Copyright 1935 by Jevan Roderick Brandon-Thomas and William Deane Barnes-Brand"

It would seem that although the play was first performed in 1892, it wasn't copyrighted until 1935.

Interesting...
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mark_j
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bullet Posted: 7/05/10 at 1:00am
The copyright should take effect the moment the play was written and it should last until 70 years after the author's death.  At least that is how I understand it.
 
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jonplaywright
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bullet Posted: 9/03/10 at 4:39am
Current copyright law is life plus 70, but that's a more recent development.  Best to visit the US Copyright Office website for more information.

Cheers,
Jon
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YouthPLAYS, plays for young actors and audiences
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